2. JavaFX
Charts and General Discussion
– MarbleMice.com, 9/15
The blogger discussed
his recent work with JavaFX charts noting that “JavaFX charts are
not really suited to dragging points around and the level of
intractability I want.” Therefore, he developed his own simple
editable line chart although he stated, “I will still use the JFX
Chart everywhere I can as they are pretty easy to use.”

3. Week
3.2 Knowledge Experiment
– SpikyOrange, 9/12
Blogger Rob, who admitted
to having a “limited knowledge of JavaFX,” developed a small
scene graph that “shows you how quickly a newbie can pick up JavaFX
and run with it!” He was pleased to find the code required for his
experiment was pretty small and said “I think I am going to like
JavaFX!”

4. New
Graphics – New Challenges
– The JavaFX Journey, 9/11
The blogger reported
that he recently reworked the graphics engine in his JavaFX game
Clash, and said “fortunately for me, JavaFX is able to handle it in
spades.” He noted that JavaFX can handle up to 50 characters on
the screen, moving at different times and said “I am beyond
pleasantly surprised that it can.”

5. JavaFX
wordpress calendar widget –
Michel LeBlond Blog, 9/17
The blogger completed
a redesign and integration of the JavaFX calendar widget to function
in Wordpress. He said the applet was modified using NetBeans and the
Bluefish HTML editor and described how the widget was further
customized and optimized to perform on Wordpress.

7. JavaFX
and RSS
– Macca Blog, 9/14
Blogger Mark revisited
the RSS feature in JavaFX, which he noted people “tend to quickly
forget about,” and described and demonstrated the RSS support in
JavaFX in this tutorial by working with the javafx.data.feed.rss
package and the RssTask class.

8. JavaFX
classes constructors
– Mils in a Nutshell, 9/14
The blogger reported
that he had been struggling with a JavaFX object oriented model
because there were no classes constructors in JavaFX. He did find a
way to combine several steps to create a type of constructor (similar
to Java) and demonstrated how to do so in this tutorial.

9. Sticky
Note, A JavaFX Tutorial
– Gooder Code, 9/12
Blogger Kerry posted
a tutorial that demonstrated how he developed his first JavaFX
program called Sticky Note, that mimics the Windows 7 feature Sticky
Notes. He said it provides a sticky note that the user can open and
fill with reminders, which are saved and restored between application
runs.

10. JavaFX
Password Field
– Martin Matula's Blog, 9/12
Blogger Martin reported
that since there is no password field in JavaFX, he decided to create
one since he was not pleased with any of the workarounds he
discovered. He presented his Password Field and the code to create
it in this post, and described it as “an elegant and simple
solution,” noting that “it looks and behaves exactly as you would
expect of a password field.”

11. Using
Transitions to Simplify JavaFX Animations
– InformIT, 9/9
Jeff Friesen discussed
how JavaFX simplifies common animations by providing “canned”
animation transition classes, which he introduced in this tutorial. He
also shows how to create your own additional classes in this
in-depth tutorial.